Metonymies we live without (CROSBI ID 39854)
Prilog u knjizi | izvorni znanstveni rad
Podaci o odgovornosti
Brdar, Mario
engleski
Metonymies we live without
The chapter starts from the assumption that one of the central properties of metonymy is the contingence of the relationship between the metonymic source and its target. One of the less obvious corollaries of this claim is that metonymy can in general be dispensed with in language: the intended or targeted meaning can always be expressed by some alternative means and not necessarily by means of a metonymic source. Metonymic extensions from nouns denoting countable entities to a mass/substance sense are studied in one case study. A second case study is on the metonymic interpretation of manner-of-speaking predicate adjectives. The chapter focuses on metonymy avoiding and metonymy marking strategies, which are used to different degrees in languages such as English, German, Hungarian, Croatian, and Spanish in order to restrict the proliferation of metonymy-induced polysemy. He attempts to correlate these strategies with the grammatical features of these languages, showing that the relation between metonymy and grammar is bidirectional.
animal grinding; contingency; metonymy; metonymy markng strategies; polysemy
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Podaci o prilogu
259-274.
objavljeno
Podaci o knjizi
Metonymy and Metaphor in Grammar
Panther, Klaus-Uwe ; Thornburg, Linda L. ; Barcelona, Antonio
Amsterdam : Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing
2009.
978 90 272 2379 1